The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

Monaco bombing was ‘attempted assassination’, not terror attack, say prosecutors – Europe live

Authorities are still searching to identify the suspect of an alleged assassination attempt of a Ukrainian business tycoon

in Madrid

More than 1 million undocumented migrants and asylum seekers have applied to regularise their status in Spain under a government programme to harness and defend the benefits of immigration at a time when most European countries are pulling up the drawbridge.

“The fact that more than 1 million people submitted applications shows just how necessary this recognition of rights and responsibilities was.”

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Labour MPs tell Burnham to ignore ‘deluded’ calls for more North Sea drilling

Critics debunk economic claims as research finds Rosebank development would produce estimated 250m tonnes of CO2

Scores of Labour MPs have urged the prospective prime minister Andy Burnham to rule out the “tin-eared” and “deluded” development of the Rosebank oilfield in the North Sea, which new research indicates would produce as much carbon dioxide as the UK does in 10 months.

Estimates seen by the Guardian show that Rosebank, which mainly contains oil, would produce about 250m tonnes of CO2 over its lifetime. That is the equivalent of about 70% of the UK’s annual emissions.

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Who did it best? USA 1994 versus World Cup 2026 – then and now

From the hairstyles to the stadia, the kits to the celebrations, we take a look at the changing face of the game.

Tap on the images below to fade between the visuals

It’s 32 years since Diego Maradona went berserk down the barrel of a TV camera after scoring for Argentina; since Bebeto rocked an imaginary baby to sleep; since Roberto Baggio blazed his spot-kick into orbit (the tournament’s second worst penalty after Diana Ross’s blooper during the opening ceremony); since Carlos Valderrama wowed the world with his luscious blonde afro.

The visuals from the World Cup in 1994 were rich and cinematic, but does the beautiful game look that different on its return to the United States? Has football lost its style and soul? Or will this year’s tournament live just as long in the memory as its predecessor?

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Supergirl: doggy distress, frontier justice and a new direction for superhero movies – discuss with spoilers

Craig Gillespie’s far-out adventure is something of a quirky oddity compared to bigger blockbuster outings – so why is it failing to fly at the box office?

James Gunn’s Superman was the major make-or-break moment for DC’s latest cinematic reboot. And yet its follow-up may ultimately prove just as revealing, not least because it offers up a first real indication of the kind of universe Gunn intends to build once the novelty of the man of steel’s return has worn off. Will every chapter of the DCU be chained to the kind of world-saving spectacle we remember from the older Zack Snyder films? Or is there room for stranger, smaller stories to take place in the same shared reality?

With Supergirl, the answer appears to be yes. Craig Gillespie’s film heads in some unexpectedly far-out directions, makes one particularly bold change from its source material, Tom King and Bilquis Evely’s acclaimed comic Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow, and quietly suggests that DC’s greatest strength may lie not just in trying to out-Marvel Marvel. Here’s the lowdown for those who’ve seen it – and don’t forget to let us know your thoughts in the comments on how this affects Gunn’s wider universe.

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UK ‘minded to’ intervene in Paramount’s $110bn takeover of Warner Bros Discovery

Lisa Nandy to ask regulators to assess mega-merger involving Channel 5, CNN and TNT Sports on grounds of media plurality and competition

The UK culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, intends to ask the British media and competition watchdogs to examine Paramount’s $110bn (£85bn) acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery.

The WBD takeover deal will create a media powerhouse controlling assets including: the Hollywood studios behind franchises including Superman, Batman and Top Gun; the UK’s Channel 5; news channel CNN; TNT Sports, which broadcasts Champions League, Premier League and the Olympics; and the Paramount+ and HBO Max streaming services.

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One million migrants in Spain apply to regularise status in new scheme

Programme offering a one-year residence and work permit attracts double expected number of applicants

More than 1 million undocumented migrants and asylum seekers have applied to regularise their status in Spain under a government programme to harness and defend the benefits of immigration at a time when most European countries are pulling up the drawbridge.

Although the massive regularisation initiative, announced by the socialist-led government in January, was originally intended to benefit about 500,000 people, it had attracted more than twice that number of applicants by the time the registration period ended on Tuesday.

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Is heterosexuality hopeless? | Arwa Mahdawi

Some argue that it is now embarrassing, particularly for women. But the fatalism of Extremely Online discourse obscures the actual picture

As we wrap up pride month, I think the International Committee for Homosexual Advancement should give itself a pat on the back. Despite a challenging geopolitical environment, the gay agenda continues apace. Judging by recent headlines, heterosexuality has become somewhat embarrassing, particularly for women – a congenital condition you don’t really want to admit to in public and wish there was a cure for. But while there is no remedy for this modern malaise, there is a snazzy name for it: “heteropessimism”.

Asa Seresin is the scholar responsible for foisting this term (later amended to “heterofatalism”) on to the world. In a viral essay for the New Inquiry in 2019, Seresin explained it consists of “performative disaffiliations with heterosexuality … or hopelessness about straight experience”. That essay spawned a heteroload of thinkpieces and memes, a classic of the genre being a Vogue piece that asked: Is Having a Boyfriend Embarrassing Now?. Even Zohran Mamdani weighed in on this very important question. For the record, he said no: “But if you’re worried that your boyfriend will embarrass you, you should probably get a new boyfriend.”

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404 Media

404 Media is an independent media company founded by technology journalists Jason Koebler, Emanuel Maiberg, Samantha Cole, and Joseph Cox.

How I Bought a Private Jet By Selling $10 Subscriptions to 404 Media

How I Bought a Private Jet By Selling $10 Subscriptions to 404 Media

Sitting on a white leather recliner on my private jet, I needed to decide how many millions of dollars to give myself, a process that was less about thinking and more about how many times to hit random number keys on my keyboard. I watched 404 Media’s revenue graph go up and to the right. 

I clicked record on my camera, wanting to show my followers how hard I work, even when I’m getting shuttled off to exotic locations. “We’re here on the PJ, off to Ibiza. Got the passport, got the prosecco. We’re hustling. 404media.co,” I say. “You want to get rich? Publish journalism on the internet. I just published something.”

Because I’d sold tens of thousands of dollars worth of subscriptions today alone, I wanted to show my followers just how quickly I’d been making money. I opened the Stripe app on my phone and decided how many subscriptions I wanted to sell. I used a slider bar—again, somewhat at random—to select 164 new subscribers, spaced out every .5 seconds. I clicked a button that said “Start Burst.” Notifications begin streaming across my phone’s Lock Screen. I hold it up to the camera.

“Let me show you how easy it is. Just published,” I say, holding my phone up to the camera. “New Payment from Stripe,” the notifications read. “You received a payment of $100 from rachel.thompson@gmail.com,” one says. Then John Wright subscribes. Then Megan Johnson. Then Daniel Thomas. Honestly, I can’t keep up. “Ten dollars, ten dollars, a hundred dollars a hundred dollars,” I say, pointing at the phone. “Take my easy course online, learn how to become rich like us.” 

“Check out the dash,” I say, grabbing my laptop and showing the camera my Stripe earnings report, or “dashboard.” “This is from today only. $51,000 gross, $2.7 million so far this year. It’s easy. Take my online course, join the community, I’ll show you how to be rich.”

I stop recording. In reality, I was sitting alone in photo studio Olympic 4, inside a warehouse jammed between the 5 freeway, a railway for cargo trains, and the largely dry, concrete Los Angeles River. Moments earlier I called a receptionist because the code for my one-hour rental ($65) wasn’t working. I didn’t even have the keys to my fake, indoor private jet. I had to stop recording because my voice inside the private jet was overpowered first by a power saw outside, then by an ambulance siren. My subscribers, my Stripe dashboard, my notifications were all fake of course. My prosecco was real; I bought it at Ralph’s for a party a few months ago on sale for $6. It didn’t matter. I was LARPing. It was going well. Buy my course.

Over the last few years, I have become mildly obsessed with hustle bros: The Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube influencers who claim to have become wildly wealthy by doing some sort of hustle. Some of them make AI babes they monetize via OnlyFans competitors. Some are into crypto. Others do real estate. Some do clipping. Some do AI slop. Some do drop shipping. The thing they all have in common is that they all have an online course to sell you, telling you exactly how they got rich and how you can too. Subscribe for $30 a month and you’ll gain access to their Whop course (a Patreon-like platform popular for hosting hustlebro courses), their Discord community, and, critically, all their secrets. Because I’ve reported endlessly on various hustlebro schemes, I have bought many of these courses, and they’re almost universally the same: They feature shitty, usually AI-generated (or poorly written) PDF guides, a community that has just a handful of people in it, various webinars, video content, and, sometimes, access to various vibe coded software. 

Using these simple strategies, they make monthly recurring revenue, allowing them to hustle from anywhere. Why are you, a loser, sitting at home scrolling Instagram Reels on your phone when you could be making and selling AI porn subscriptions while poolside in Ibiza, at a stoplight in your Maybach, while poppin’ champagne on the PJ, or while getting bottle service at the club?

Critical to the hustlebro fantasy is the “dashboard,” which are screenshots and videos of the analytics page for whatever platform you’re using. This is the number of subscribers and revenue you get from hustling, and posting these in your videos or in a slideshow is both a flex and is nominally proof that you are indeed rich and that your course is therefore worth buying.

The extremely obvious truth (which is barely even veiled) is that at least most of these hustlebros are faking it. They hope to make money selling their courses. The scheme is not the AI babe or the drop shipping, it’s the course, the community, the fantasy. They’re LARPing, or LARPmaxxing, if you will. In recent months, LARPing has become a whole subculture on TikTok and Instagram; pretending you’re rich, just for the hell of it.

How I Bought a Private Jet By Selling $10 Subscriptions to 404 Media
Screengrab: lvrpy via TikTok

And so a new economy has popped up to service this fantasy. The LARP influencer sells tools, software, videos, and guides to LARPing; subscribe to my course and I’ll help you make content to market your subscription course about making content to sell subscriptions to poor fools on the internet.

The first LARP influencer I found was someone who goes by “Jordan” on TikTok. I’m not sure which video or slideshow I saw first, but most of his content is the same. His “HOW TO LARP LIKE A PRO” playlist features tips like:

  • “Buy a Chinese Rimowa rep (Just walk around with it)”
  • “Pull up to your local airport and ask for a tour (for your school project on PJs)”
  • “Take pics outside Erewhon”
  • “Pull up to a boat rental spot, ask for a tour, and then bounce (Take as many pics as you can)”
  • “Rent a Maybach for 20min and have your friend drive you around”
  • “Open your laptop and act like you’re hustling”
  • “Put your old shoe boxes into paper bags (You just went shopping)”
  • “Fake dashboards: Very good for more targeted warping (e.g. if you’re trying to sell a course on a specific business method) or to justify your “lifestyle.” Can be done by photoshopping screenshots or by using dedicated dashboard replicas for added realism (link in bio)”

I think all of these tips are very funny, but this last one really intrigued me. Jordan was advertising a Telegram account called the “Fakify” “Larp marketplace.” Fakify has 9,000 members on Telegram and sells just two products: Software that makes fake YouTube, Shopify, Coinbase, and Fanvue dashboards and a web app that sends your phone fake notifications for Shopify, Stripe, and Whop. This software is not cheap. A fake Shopify dashboard costs $750, a YouTube dashboard costs $550. The notification app costs $100. 

A demonstration of DashMock

I found various fake dashboard software companies. Some (most?) are vibe coded, and a lot of them look very bad. I found a company called Dashmock, which advertises both to would-be salespeople and to hustlebros as “the secret weapon for agencies and founders. Visual dashboards that close deals.” 

“FAKE IT UNTIL YOU MAKE IT,” they advertise. “DashMock lets users create realistic, professional dashboards for major business and creator platforms like OnlyFans, Shopify, Stripe, Fanvue, and Infloww. No coding, no analytics, no real account connections.” Critically, DashMock offers “pixel-perfect” fake dashboards, meaning that the company monitors what a real dashboard looks like and updates their software constantly: “We push updates every single week,” they say. Each dashboard is sold individually, and as a subscription. An OnlyFans dashboard costs $119 a month, a Shopify dashboard costs $149 a month, a Stripe dashboard costs $189 per month.

I thought I would try this software. 

I realized that, in many ways, 404 Media has the business that many of these hustlebros say they want to build. We have subscribers, we have monthly recurring revenue. We are not rich, but we do have a functioning business that uses Stripe and Shopify; I could compare the real Stripe dashboard to the fake Stripe dashboard, and the real Shopify notifications to the notifications we get when we sell merch. Rather than reinvent the wheel for my LARP, my fake course would be about journalism, and my general spiel would be that it is incredibly lucrative to publish factual, deeply researched articles and blogs to the internet  (a thing that is famously not true). Want to become rich? I will teach you to be a blogger.

Honestly, I have no beef with either the Dashmock Stripe dashboard I bought or the Fakify notifications app I bought. Both do what they say they do. The Dashmock Stripe dashboard lets you edit your revenue graphs by clicking and dragging the lines on the line graph; you can edit your overall revenue and company name hidden in a plus button that is usually used to sell a new product in Stripe (if only real business were this easy). You can also change your logo using a variety of preset options; an upload logo feature did not work for me, which was really the only thing that didn’t work. The URL for the dashboard was also fake (stripè.com, with a backwards accent over the e), and I got a warning when I opened it in Chrome. But otherwise, it would be great for LARPing.

The notifications app was even better. At a website called notification-generator.com, I selected between Stripe, Shopify, and Whop. It is essentially a mobile website that you add as a bookmark to the home screen of your phone. I tested both Stripe and Shopify. You input whatever dollar amounts you want the “sold” product to be, and then can either input a list of fake email addresses or have it randomly generate email addresses from fake “customers” “using common names and weighted domains (~75% gmail.com, ~25% outlook.com). You can customize the notification to say whatever you want; I kept it as “You received a payment of $X from [email address].” You can click a button to send one notification or you can use a slide bar to send a burst of as many as 200 notifications spaced as far apart as you want. This, too, worked very well. While I was setting this up, I got a real Shopify notification for a real t-shirt we sold; it looked the exact same as the fake notifications.

With my fake software set up, I realized I would need to actually LARP to have footage to go along with my fake dashboards.

To LARP, I set some general ground rules for myself. I would work on this for only one day. I would not actually make a course. I felt I could easily take this very far, renting Maybachs, booking trips, etc. I would hop around Los Angeles and emulate things I had seen before in one very chaotic day, and I would be obnoxious in my videos but I would try not to actively bother people.

I started by booking a private jet photoshoot in a warehouse for $65 for an hour. I hopped in my (leased, non luxury) car with my camera, phone, laptop, and a bunch of changes of clothes (to make it look like I was shooting content on different days, a tip I learned from a LARPer). In a stroke of inspiration, I grabbed my passport and a bottle of prosecco. I got to the photo studio and couldn’t get inside, which felt distinctly non-luxurious. Eventually, I managed to amble my way, arms overloaded with gear and clothes, into the studio. The studio felt cheap and old but actually looked good on camera. I shot my footage, which you can see spaced throughout this article. I periodically had to stop for ambulances and power saws, as the studio was working on building out some of its other experiences. The furniture in the “private jet” felt very cheap, like it was probably purchased either secondhand or was the cheapest they could find on Wayfair. While sitting in my jet, I found myself thinking about a Hollywood studio tour I had recently been on, where the guide explained that nearly everything on most sets is built out of styrofoam or other very cheap and light materials; it just needs to look good on camera. 

When my hour was up, I thought I should swing by the jewelry district, which is very Uncut Gems. I had bought a necklace there a few years ago and thought maybe the guy who sold it to me would let me hold a Rolex or a stack of gold chains. I circled the jewelry district over and over, looking for parking. I eventually found a lot that charged a mere $25 (lol) for one hour of parking. I got out and looked for my guy, but he wasn’t there. I was not shameless enough to ask any of the vendors to let me hold their very expensive wares for my stunt blog. So I walked to a taco truck (luxurious), and had a stroke of inspiration. I was standing outside of a jewelry box wholesaler, as in, a store that sells jewelry boxes and bags to actual jewelry vendors. I walked in and bought a few jewelry bags and 20 earring boxes for $12. As I ate my tacos, I stuffed the boxes into the bags. I walked back into the jewelry mall and filmed myself walking out “Just walked out of the St. Vincent Jewelry Center,” I said, holding up my bags of empty boxes. “Bought out a few places. This is how much money you can make when you blog. When you’re selling your blogs. You want as much jewelry as me? Buy my course.” I fumbled my bags, which fell all over the street. 

I walked back to my car, sat in traffic for 1.5 hours, and got back to my apartment. I live close to Marina del Ray, a huge marina where celebrities and billionaires keep their megayachts. I decided to bike over there and film some content outside of a yacht club: “Gonna go take the yacht out for a spin, head over to the yacht club for some food and drink. If you want a yacht, publish blogs on the internet. The key to getting rich, you can learn in my online course, is to write factual and good journalistic articles that have high impact. You can make millions of dollars a year doing this,” I said. Then I went to Hi-Ho Cheeseburger, bought a burger, and filmed myself (and my laptop) overlooking the yachts. 

Some larpers say that you can buy clip packs of exotic locations, which you can use to cut into social media clips. Pools in exotic locations like Bali and Greece, footage from inside nightclubs and concerts, private jets, beautiful nature. This type of fake LARPing, where you buy clips, is seen as lame even by LARP standards, because you can easily be caught faking. To have good footage, you need first-person footage of yourself, and footage with you actually in it, for authenticity’s sake. 

The goal for all of this was to film content that I could then use to make it seem like I was really rich. As I was running around Los Angeles alone, portraying a life that I didn't have, I started thinking about what other footage might exist on my camera roll that could be used for my LARP. To complete my LARP experience, I did what many LARPers do, and hired someone on Fiverr to turn my raw footage into slickly edited reels; I paid a total of $60 for three short edits.

While looking through my camera roll, I began thinking that I have had a very privileged and beautiful life, and that blogging has actually afforded me many opportunities that most people never have. I went on safari to Kenya as part of a conference I was asked to speak at; I’ve been to Norway and Athens, for free, to speak on panels or give trainings, which I have footage of. I have been on lots of boats; last year I rented a yacht with a bunch of friends, which sounds extremely luxurious and was very fun, but ultimately cost us only $50 each. 

I thought about a bachelor party I went on where the groom got bottle service as I watched footage of myself dancing on tables with a sparkler in my mouth. I thought of the vacations and backpacking trips I’d taken, the nature I’ve seen, the hikes I’ve been on. As I scrolled through my camera roll I saw all of this stuff, and I started to feel happy, an emotion I did not expect when I was filming myself alone in a sad warehouse. I have had a good life as a blogger. 

Surprisingly, by LARPing, I had unexpectedly tricked myself into appreciating my life and the experiences I’ve had. To help me keep it up, please buy my course, or, alternatively, subscribe to 404 Media.


Formula 1 News

Formula 1® - The Official F1® Website

Brown on McLaren stance amid talk of a move for Verstappen

Silly season is ramping up in the world of Formula 1, with plenty of chatter in Austria about the future of Max Verstappen. The Dutchman holds a long-term deal with Red Bull until the end of the 2028 season, but there are already rumours circulating about where he might end up should he decide to move on earlier than planned.

'Gezondheidsraad' adviseert TK: 'ga vooral door met hormoonbehandeling voor minderjarigen'

Gezondheidsraad adviseert mannen naar Elliot Page te luisteren over wat gezonde mannelijkheid is

Social

Het noodpleidooi van dr. Omtzigt en andere artsen mocht niet baten. De 'Gezondheidsraad' blijft er bij: meervoudig belaste kinderen, meer dan eens bij jeugdzorg in beeld, vaak met autisme, persoonlijkheidsstoornissen en twijfel aan geaardheid, mogen blootgesteld blijven worden aan de onomkeerbare effecten van hormoonbehandelingen - waaronder onvruchtbaarheid, gewijzigde botdichtheid, seksuele ondergevoeligheid en een levenslange afhankelijkheid van die hormonen.

De 'Gezondheidsraad' schrijft: "Uit onderzoek blijkt dat hormoonbehandelingen fysiek doen wat ze moeten doen en ook de mentale gezondheid lijkt erdoor te verbeteren. De behandelingen hebben mogelijk ook ongewenste effecten, maar de Gezondheidsraad ziet in de beperkte gegevens die daarover beschikbaar zijn geen reden om de behandelingen niet aan te bieden, zeker omdat niets doen ook schadelijke gevolgen kan hebben voor de mentale gezondheid. De raad kan geen uitspraak doen over het aantal mensen dat spijt heeft van hormoonbehandelingen. Daarover zijn te weinig gegevens beschikbaar."

Ja nou okay lekker makkelijk!

Toegegeven: lijkt meer op Achilles dan tijdens haar rol als Achilles (Odyssey)

Social

Wel.nl

Minder lezen, Meer weten.

Twee jaar cel om in brand steken politieauto bij rellen Malieveld

DEN HAAG (ANP) - Een 26-jarige man uit Amerongen heeft twee jaar gevangenisstraf gekregen voor het in brand steken van een politieauto tijdens de rellen op het Malieveld van afgelopen september. Dat heeft de rechter in Den Haag dinsdag bepaald. Acht maanden van die straf zijn voorwaardelijk.

De man uit het Utrechtse dorp is veroordeeld voor openlijke geweldpleging tegen zowel voorwerpen als personen en brandstichting. Bij de strafeis zei het Openbaar Ministerie dat het 1700 uur aan beeldmateriaal had waarop de handelingen van de man te zien waren. Tijdens de rechtszaak zei de man dat hij zich wel herkende op de camerabeelden die waren genomen van de in brand gestoken auto, maar dat hij het vuur niet had aangestoken.

De Haagse rechter heeft tot nu toe 35 mensen veroordeeld voor betrokkenheid bij de rellen. De meeste krijgen straf voor openlijke geweldpleging en vernieling.


Hoge Raad wil advies Europees Hof over herziening na vrijspraak

DEN HAAG (ANP) - De Hoge Raad, de hoogste strafrechter, wil van de Europese rechters weten of een oude moordzaak ook kan worden heropend wanneer die zaak is afgerond voordat de wet inging die het mogelijk maakt om oude moordzaken te heropenen. De vraag wordt voorgelegd aan het Europees Hof voor de Rechten van de Mens, zoals de procureur-generaal had geadviseerd. Tot het antwoord er is, ligt de behandeling stil.

De zaak draait om de moord op de 28-jarige Tamara Wolvers in Alphen aan den Rijn in 2006. Ze werd gevonden in haar ouderlijk huis met een plastic zak over haar hoofd. Ze was gewurgd en had een mes in haar borst. De ex-man van haar tante werd verdacht van de moord. De rechtbank en het gerechtshof spraken hem echter vrij. Dat werd definitief toen de Hoge Raad in maart 2012 een cassatie afwees.

Het OM zegt nieuw en belastend DNA-bewijs te hebben en wil de moordzaak daarom opnieuw behandelen, wat sinds oktober 2013 mogelijk is. De Hoge Raad moet daarover beslissen.


Iran stuurt delegatie naar Qatar om over tegoeden te praten

TEHERAN (ANP/AFP) - Iran stuurt woensdag "beslist" een delegatie naar Qatar om er te praten over bevroren Iraanse tegoeden. Dit zei de woordvoerder van het Iraanse ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken.

De Amerikaanse gezanten Steve Witkoff en Jared Kushner zijn dinsdag gearriveerd in Qatar. Zij spreken er met Qatarezen over onderhandelingen met Iran, meldde de regering van het emiraat.

Onder de bemiddelaars is de premier van Qatar, Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani. Qatar speelt net als Pakistan een belangrijke rol in de relatie tussen Washington en Teheran en heeft historisch gezien goede betrekkingen met Iran. Zo exploiteren de twee landen samen een groot gasveld onder de Perzische Golf. In Qatar is ook de grootste Amerikaanse luchtmachtbasis in de regio.

De Iraanse woordvoerder had eerder gezegd dat een Iraanse delegatie naar Qatar zou gaan om te spreken over het akkoord tussen Iran en de VS. Hij zei toen dat er geen onderhandelingen of ontmoetingen met gezanten van de VS waren gepland.


‘AI-hamburger’ is én lekker én duurzaam – maar niet heus

Is het lastig om een lekkere vleesarme hamburger te maken? Kunstmatige intelligentie kan wél een goed recept bedenken, dachten onderzoekers. Wat is het resultaat?


25 jaar ‘Legally Blonde’: de vrouwelijke advocaat in films en series mag nu ook gewoon een botte hork zijn

Voor de toekomstige advocaat in ‘Legally Blonde’ was het nog belangrijk om naast heel slim en ambitieus ook heel ‘vrouwelijk’ te zijn; roze outfits, lief en vriendelijk. In recentere producties is het heel gewoon als ook zij, net als mannen, hard, gehaaid, professioneel of sociaal onaangepast is.


Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Motorrijder overleden na aanrijding met vrachtwagen

Een motorrijder is dinsdagmiddag om het leven gekomen na een ongeluk met een vrachtwagen. Dat gebeurde op de N214 bij Oud-Alblas.

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Remembering How Microsoft's Fake Windows Error Ended In a $280 Million Secret Settlement

Slashdot reader joshuark summarizes this walk down memory lane from the tech site MakeUseOf:
Facing real competition from Digital Research's DR DOS, Microsoft secretly embedded a sabotaging mechanism known as "AARD code" into beta versions of Windows 3.1 to prevent it from running on Digital Research's competing DR DOS operating system.This code triggered fake, alarming error messages to convince developers that DR DOS was unstable... Although Microsoft disabled the feature in the final retail release, the California-based firm Caldera, Inc., which had acquired DR DOS assets, sued Microsoft for anti-competitive practices.Microsoft settled the lawsuit out of court in 2000 for $280 million, a figure that remained sealed until it was unsealed in 2009.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

osanpo_1957

gnsk has added a photo to the pool:

osanpo_1957

De Speld

Uw vaste prik voor betrouwbaar nieuws.

Nederland ontloopt Frankrijk in kwartfinale’

​Oranje kan met opgeheven hoofd vooruit kijken in het toernooi. De ploeg van Ronald Koeman weet de sterrenploeg van Frankrijk te ontlopen in de kwartfinale.

Vooraf werd gezegd dat een ontmoeting met de Fransen waarschijnlijk einde toernooi zou zijn, maar dankzij het knappe spel van Oranje weten ze dat scenario te voorkomen. Bondscoach Ronald Koeman: “Soms heb je een beetje geluk nodig en nu zit het gewoon echt even mee.”

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VK: Voorpagina

Volkskrant.nl biedt het laatste nieuws, opinie en achtergronden

RIVM: slaapverstoring door nachtvluchten wordt onderschat, overheid rekent met verouderd model